Dear Parents, Next week we'll celebrate National Lutherans Schools Week. For those parents who are new, this is a week that is recognized by the thousands of Lutheran schools across this country. We are thankful for our history going back centuries to colonial times and for the present system of universities that trains current Lutheran school teachers, men and women who dedicate their lives to teaching students in these schools. During this week we have many special activities planned for the students as follows: Friday, January 24 Fun Run - Planned as an introduction to the week, students run a course and raise money for athletics at Epiphany. A built-in rain date is Monday just in case. Here's the schedule --- K-1st grade runs 12:45-1:20, 2nd-4th grades run 1:20-2:05, and 5th-8th grades run 2:15-3:00 Sunday, January 26 Kindergarten students will sing along with the Prekindergarten students in the 10:45 worship service at Epiphany. Monday, January 27 we'll have devotions with the whole school together in the morning, and it will also be mismatch day for dressing. Tuesday, January 28, we'll have devotions with the whole school together in the morning, and it will also be class color day with these colors day for dressing. Kindergarten-Green, 1st-Yellow, 2nd-Orange, 3rd-Purple, 4th-Brown, 5th-Red, 6th-Blue, 7th & 8th-Black Wednesday, January 29 we'll have devotions with the whole school together in the morning, and it be book character for dressing. Fifth through eighth grade students will take a turn in the Epiphany food bank as a service project. Thursday, January 30 we'll have devotions with the whole school together in the morning, and it be camo for dressing. Students in Kindergarten through third grade will take their turns in the Epiphany food bank as a service project. Students may bring canned goods for the food bank any day. They will have an opportunity to drop the cans off at the food bank on the way to the morning's devotion. Friday, January 31 is Special Visitors Day and spirit day for dressing. Special visitors will need pick up a name badge (requires a driver's license number for background check). They will save a lot of time by registering in advance at our website. Chapel is moved to Friday, so the visitors can attend with the student. Students and their special visitors will attend the book fair and activities in the classroom. School will dismiss at 11:30 that day, so the student and visitor can have some time together in the afternoon. Have a good remainder of this week and a great next week, Tim Miesner

Dear Parents, Last week I told you that I have a new resolution to send you a newsletter each week. My first letter is on research regarding motivation. So what is motivation? What makes you want to do something, and what makes our children want to do things? In this letter I'm going to describe two kinds of motivation, intrinsic and extrinsic. Extrinsic motivation comes from the outside. When we work to get a paycheck, that's an example of extrinsic motivation. Another example is your children working to earn good grades or maybe to get your approval. Intrinsic motivation comes from within. We do these things for no obvious material or external reward. When you pick up a piece of trash in the hall and nobody sees it, that's done for another reason. You probably have a desire for the building to look nice. Or another example -- we listen all the way through another person's words, even though we think we already know how it's going to end. That's just motivated by kindness, not an external reward (unless of course the other person is interviewing you for a job). Children need extrinsic rewards at first in life. We give them snack-type rewards or praise. As they grow older, they need increasingly larger rewards to remain motivated. By this they show they have learned to negotiate. The same action that a three year old will take for an M&M would require an iPad to motivate a middle schooler. Obviously we need to transition to intrinsic motivation at some point. So how do we make that transition? First, children learn by example. A parent who does the right thing simply because it's the right thing is setting such an example. Students who live in these households have a big advantage in life. Children who grow up with generous parents learn generosity. Children who grow up with parents who set good personal boundaries learn to set healthy boundaries themselves. In this regard, step one is simply setting a good example. Second, teach children to do things right because they are right. It's not hard for children to understand that concept. You will find children are much more satisfied with life (and usually more pleasant to have around) as they learn this concept. They are very open to learning and living in this way. The people who have difficulty are the ones who have never been taught and think they should be rewarded for everything they do. Teens in this category are not fun to have around the home. You can avoid this by teaching children at a young age the joy of doing the right thing simply because it's the right thing. Finally, remember this is something that is learned over a long period of time. It's okay to motivate young children extrinsically, but you don't want to treat your seventh graders the same as your first grader. As children mature they should gradually move to increased motivation through extrinsic means. Unfortunately we all know adults who have never made this transition. This writing is intentionally brief, something that always has the potential for misunderstanding. If so, I apologize. If you would like to discuss anything I've written here, I'd love to meet with you. In His Service, Tim Miesner

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14423 West Rd.​ Houston, TX 77041

P: 713-896-1843 - K-8th​P: 713-896-1316 - Preschool​F: 713-896-7568

What our families Are Saying

"Faith, character and values are of utmost importance in our home. Epiphany Lutheran School has provided invaluable teachings for my children in this area. The teachers have always provided positive, open communication and dialog so you truly feel like you are working together in "raising" your children. We love the family environment, culture and camaraderie the students have with each other. It is truly a blessing to be a part of this school community." Great Schools reviewer

"Awesome school! My son is in 8th grade and I have seen him grow socially and his work ethic is 100% improved. This class sizes are small which means greater 1-1 attention. I wish I would have sent him earlier. I highly recommend Epiphany!" Great Schools reviewer

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NON-DISCRIMINATION POLICYEpiphany Lutheran School admits students of any race, color, national and ethnic origin to all the rights, privileges, programs, and activities generally accorded or made available to students at the school. It does not discriminate on the basis of sex, race, color, national and ethnic origin in administration of its educational policies, admission policies, athletics, or other school administered programs.